Charles E. Silberman

Charles E. Silberman is the author of Criminal Violence, Criminal Justice (1978), a study of crime and the American criminal justice system. Silberman uses econometric methods to measure the effectiveness in terms of criminal deterrence of two factors: the degree of punishment; and the probability of apprehension. A simple "expected loss" model would predict that deterrent effect would depend only on the result of multiplying the penalty by the probability of it occurring. Silberman concluded that contrary to this model, the likelihood of punishment had a greater effect in most situations. Silberman also states, "Crime does more than expose the weakness in social relationships; it undermines the social order itself, by destroying the assumptions on which it is based."

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
maurice gibb
pump girls
m43 field cap
arnold henry bergier
helena petrovna blavatsky
jorge paez
scourge
hookah
roger macbride
transhuman
sleeper ship
sentience
frank schmalleger
justice research association
houston comets
janet frame
1996 summer paralympics
bart the genius
gray's anatomy
list of human anatomical features
yitzhak shamir
continental army
ehud barak
richard threlkeld cox
richard cox
criminal justice
constitutional convention
jim hunt
theodore hall
cold war espionage
worksop
benjamin nathaniel smith
spree killer
ricky byrdsong
larry gene ashbrook
racial holy war
eric chiwaya
lifting body
judy collins
the meters
john baez
f number
moby grape
moving sidewalks